It was arresting. It was heartbreaking. And it was rash, unnecessary and wrong. There is no good journalistic reason to put a child at a mass-murder scene on live TV, permission of the parents or not. There’s not even a bad-but-practical reason to do it, beyond getting buzz and adding “color” to a story. No one learned anything they couldn’t have from talking to people off-camera and privately.

“And the bottom line is, if you think about all of the interviews you’ve seen of kids on the scene of terrible events, you notice how often some of them will talk and talk and talk? … There’s an attempt to repeat and to go over and over and over in an attempt to metabolize the experience. The problem is, when it’s done in a way that’s not in a clinical or therapeutic setting, it doesn’t serve that function. It actually overstimulates,” Marans said.

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